THE MiCIIIGN flATLY T1 RSD 1'r, APRIL -2, 159t THE MICHIGAN DAILY i @-IrA Publisned every morning except Monday during the University year and Summer Session by the Board in Control of Student Publications. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of republication of all other matter herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan as second class mail matter. Subscriptions during regular school year by carrier, $4.00; by mal, $4.50. Representatives: National Advertising Service, Inc. 420 Madison Ave., New York City; 400 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, Ill. EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Telephone 4925 BOARD OF EDITORS MANAGING EDITOR ..............THOMAS H. KLEENE ASOCIATE EDITOR...............THOMAS E. GROEHN Dorothy S. Gies Josephine T. McLean William R. Reed DEPARTMENTAL BOARDS eublication Department: Thomas H. Kleene, Chairman; Clinton B. Conger, Robert Cummins, Richard G. Her-' shey, Ralph W. Hurd, Fred Warner Neal. Reportorial Department: Thomas E. Groehn, Chairman; Elsie A. Pierce, Joseph S. Mattes. Editorial Department: Arnold S. Daniels, Marshall D. Shulman. 4ports Department: William R. Reed, Chairman; George Andros, Fred Buesser, Raymond Goodman. Women's Departmenz: Josephine T. McLean, Chairman; Josephine M. Cavanagh, Florence H. Davies, Marion T. Holden, Charlotte D. Rueger, Jewel W. Wuerfel. BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Telephone -214 BUSINESS MANAGER...........GEORGE H. ATHERTON CREDITMANAGER...........JOSEPH A. ROTHBARD WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER ....MARGARET COWIE WOMEN'S SERVICE MANAGER ...ELZABETH SIMONDS DEPARTMENTAL MANAGERSf -Local Advertising, William Barndt; Service Department, Willis Tomlinson; Contracts, Stanley Joffe; Accounts, Edward Wohlgemuth; Circulation and National Adver- tising, John Park: Classified Advertising and Publica- tions, Lyman Bittman. NIGHT EDITOR: RICHARD G. HERSHEY -- - Accomiplishrnents Of The Naval Conference... T HE NAVAL CONFERENCE and the meeting of the Council of the League of'Nations were both concluded last week in London. The results of the latter were admit- edly negligible, but the members of the Naval Con- ference claimed to have accomplished something of value. The American delegation returned "sat- isfied," and Secretary of State Hull was "pleased" with their work. Now that the rejoicing is ended, it is of interest to see just what has been accomp- lished. The pact drawn up at the Conference creates, in brief, qualitative limitations of navies. What it limits is the size of ships which may be built, and the size of guns which may be used on these ships. In this it differs greatly from the Wash- ington treaty of 1922 and the London pact of 1930, both of which limited the numerical size of navies, or at least attempted to do so. This lack of limi- tation is one of the great weaknesses in the new pact, for it puts the construction of larger navies at the discretion of governmental leaders and the financial resources of the various powers. Still another important weakness in the treaty is the end of the prohibition of fortification of the Pacific Islands. This fault carries a particular significance for the United States, for it shows the lack of a clear-cut policy in regard to Far Eastern problems, while the terms of the pact itself make necessary such a policy. If the present General Board policy of the Navy to protect commmercial interests by force is to be continued-and there is now nothing to restrain it - the new pact con-i tains a very dangerous solution for our Far East- ern dilemma. If, on the other hand, the policy of defense against invasion were to be the founda- tion of our policy, a peaceable solution for our relations with Japan can be accomplished. Japan and Italy have refused to subscribe to the pact, creating a double menace to world peace. The fact that they have refused to sign the pact has drawn the United States and Great Britain close together in what amounts almost to an un- official alliance, with France forming the third corner of the powerful triangle. Japan and Italy, observing this unity, which is of itself dangerous, will naturally feel that they must build larger navies for their own defense, thus creating more international enmity. In spite of the fact that Secretary Hull found the pact satisfactory, and in spite of the fact that the agreement will very likely be ratified by the Senate, it can accomplish very little good and a great deal of harm. It is not difficult to sympathize with Chancellor Hitler when he begged the peoples of the world in a speech last week to "Make peace. Do not talk of gestures." Causes OROF. HOWARD Y. McCLUSKY of f the School of Education, speaking before the Law Enforcement Institute Tuesday, advanced the generally accepted and well-substan- tiated belief that "criminals are made, not born," and that inadequate recreational facilities, broken homes, and "the gang influence" all contribute to increase crime by youth. As a remedial measure Professor McClusky urges the adoption of the methods used in New Jersey. In that state, he reports, arrest of young persons is avoided in favor of a plan of crime preven- tion whereby officers live in crime-breeding areas, become friends of the youth of the district, know its activities, and are thus able effectively to fore- ing the forces which breed it, will do more than a little to improve conditions. The procedure is similar, if an analogy will be permitted, to the frantic housewife's effort to swat all the flies in mid-summer after having left a back-yard garbage pile unmolested in June. Crimes are committed for the greatest variety of reasons, and yet it is safe to say that most of them find their origin in economic conditions. As Professor McClusky points out, the areas from which potential law-breakers come are not dif- ficult to define. They are the areas of poverty. It is ridiculous to say that man, or some men, commit crime instinctively. The causes may be scientifically traced, and the investigator is sure to find poverty and the corollaries of poverty at the end of his trail. The New Jersey plan is an excellent forwardhstep in crime control, but one must not lose sight of the fact that more than a change in law enforcement methods is needed - a fundamental change in the economic condi- tion of a great proportion of the population must be the goal, however distant it may appear. As Others See It The Beauty Of War (The following article is from ,an Italian newspaper, "L Stampa," published at Turin. --M. Levi.) RISING against the traditional traducers of mod- ern war who declare it to be an antiesthetic, we futurist poets and artist, who have recognized it for twenty-seven years as the "only world hy- giene," proclaim that: 1. War is beautiful because it fuses in harmony Strength and Kindness. 2. War is beautiful because it realizes the per- ifet mechanized man - thanks to the gas-mask, the terrifying megaphone, flame throwers and the litile tank, and completes the domination of man over his slave, the machine. 3. War is beautiful because it realizes the long- dreamed of "metalization" of the human body. 4. War is beautiful because it "symphonizes" fusillades, cannonades, pauses choked by silence, and the perfumes and odors of putrefaction. 5. War is beautiful because it completes the beauty of a flowery meadow with the passionate orchids of machine-gun fire. 6. War is beautiful because it genially remoulds the terrestrial and marine landscapes with its inspired artillery. 7. War is beautiful because it creates new ar- chitectures, as the heavy tanks. It creates the flying geometries of the aeroplane, the spiral smoke of burning villages, etc. 8. War is beautiful because it sometimes sur- passes in violence, enthusiasm and lyrical grandeur the terrestrial cataclysms and combats of the demons and angels. 9. War is beautiful because it definitely cures men of individual fear and collective panic through its refinement and stylization of heroism. Future poets and artists . . . about to enter the fray, remember the principles of the esthetics of war. They should enlighten you in your efforts and enable you to extract new poetry and new plastic works from the heroism you offer to the Future. The useful life of a modern airplane varies from 5 to 10 years. Black widow spiders can fly by stretching long threads of silk into the wind. Intense sound waves which twist steel are emitted when large caliber guns are fired. Lightning does not flash but builds up a series of steps which have been photographed. The Conning Tower HOW TO HAVE A FLOOD You scoff the day after a heavy rain, when folks tell you excitedly the river has risen four feet again. You remind them that after every hur- ricane, every snow storm, every flood, there are predictions of worse disasters to follow. You notice in the evening the water really is rising, but ascertain the rise is only four inches an hour, and that it will require twelve feet to cause damage. You just know the river will not rise more than three or four. Two hours later you take another look at the river. It comes within a foot of the road. You reflect that were it not for last week's flood, the present stage might be worth thinking about. You get home at midnight, and see the water licking across the road, reaching out tentative fingers to caress heel marks in the soft mud. You look out at the stream and see it rushing by, sil- ently, massively, with express train speed and ma- lign intensity. You ascertain the rise still is four inches an hour. You call Wilkes-Barre, fifty miles upstream, and learn it will continue to rise there until the next day. You look at Mahoning Creek and Sechler's Run, and discover, with something like horror, they are higher than last week, but unlike last week, when they poured into an empty river, are rushing head- long toward a river bank-full, through country so saturated it cannot absorb another drop of rain. Suddenly you know you are in for Trouble. You decide to remain up all night. Gentle small waves are coming in steadily from midstream, rolling softly across the road, and you jump sud- denly as you feel water above your rubbers, which a moment before stood on dry ground. The water is creeping across your lawn, filling in hollows around the shrubbery, making the sod squashy. You walk around the house and dis- cover there is a constantly narrowing width of ground. A level sweep of water stretches away on every hand. You are owner of an island, mon- arch of all you survey. You go into the cellar and find water bubbling up through the cement floor, squirting through the solid concrete wall because of the pressure be- hind it. When you come outside again you make a mental note that when the water rises another half inch it will pour through the cellar windows, make a Niagara of the cellar stairs, and even as you think of it, it happens. Frenziedly, you rake the fire into the ash pit of the furnace, and hear it hiss and snap in the water. The flood is creeping up the outside walls, an inch every ten minutes. You rush upstairs and start to carry furniture toward the second floor. Within a few minutes a half dozen neighbors from adja- cent high ground are assisting you in your frantic efforts. The water only a short time ago was assailing the bottom front porch step. You open the door and the familiar gentle wave slaps across the sill. Panic-stricken, you close the door and walk through the hall, your feet splashing in a half inch of water by the time you have reached the back door. A neighbor is there with a boat. You step off the porch into the boat, leaving the house which was a home a few hours ago, which is now a. landmark in a wilderness of water. You dis- embark a block away and take one last look be- hind. Your house stands, forlorn and reproachful, in a raging sea of muddy water and wildly tossing driftwood. REED McCARTY. Danville, Pa. Too bad that Mr. Fish, when he wrote his letter, didn't know that Broun was in prison in Mil- waukee. He might have said something about the Harvard-Jail game. -F.P.A. A Washington BYSTANDE R By KIRKE SIMPSON WASHINGTON, April 1. - If the gloomy forebodings of Secretary Wallace should be realized and a new flood of crop surpluses inundate the farm markets before election time, a factor of unguessable force would be thrown into the political pot. What would be the reaction at the polls in the farm belt to $5 hogs, which Wallace says is a certainty in 1938 anyhow; or to wheat and corn prices tumbling under the weight of piling carryovers? The Wallace '38 hog prediction compares with a five year average of $7.22 and a $9.34 price in February this year, or 24 cents above parity for the month. The corresponding figures for wheat were 88.4 cents for the five year average and a February price of 91.9 against a 111.4 parity; for corn, a 64.2 cent five year average and a February price of 55.5 against 89.00 parity. 'TALLACE declines to even guess where prices may go in case farmer cooperation in the soil con- servation substitute for the fallen AAA crop control system is not very complete. It is understandable that the sec- retary and his aides are doing every- thing in their power to induce co- operation in the AAA substitute pro- gram. Painting the alternative pros- pects in darkest colors is a well rec- ognized device to such an end. Yet Wallace is blunt in saying that the new act came too late to affect the hog-corn situation he foresees for next year or to restrict winter wheat planting. For the wheat sit- uation the only hope he sees is the cumulative effect of storm damage to winter wheat and intensive co- operation in spring planting with the soil conservation program. Q UITE clearly the farm voters bid fair to be in a position of look- ing back yearningly to AAA days at about the time they are also weigh- ing the proposals in their behalf of the two major party platforms and the words of the presidential nomi- nees. If the Wallace outlook as to. what may happen is confirmed by the 1936 party conventions, it could make a great difference in the nature of the election battle to follow. If the ef- fort to induce cooperation in the soil conservation 'indirect method of crop control fails of substantial support it would seem even possible that a farmer demand for a constitutional amendment approach to the problen might take shape at Philadelphia. It certainly is hardly to be expected at the Republican show in Cleveland. Yet at this moment there is no sign of a specific constitutional change issue, much as will be said on the subject by new deal foes. THURSDAY, APRIL 2, 1936 VOL. XLVI No. 130 Notices Apparatus Exchange: The Regents at their meeting in March, 1927, au- thorized an arrangement for the sale of scientific apparatus by one depart- ment to another, the proceeds of the sale to be credited to the budget ac- count of the department from which the apparatus is transferred. Departments having apparatus which is not in active use are advised to send descriptions thereof to the University Chemistry Store, of which Prof. R. J. Carney is director. The Chemistry Store headquarters are in Room 223, Chemistry Building. An effort will be made to sell the appara- tus to other departments which are likely to be able to use it. In some instances the apparatus may be sent to the University Chemistry Store on consignment, and, if it is not sold within a reasonable time, it will be returned to the department from which it was received. The object of this arrangement is to promote economy by reducing the amount of unused apparatus. It is hoped that departments having such apparatus will realize the advantage to themselves and to the University in availing themselves of this oppor- tunity. Shirley W. Smith. Students of the College of Litera- ture, Science, and the Arts: A meet- ing will be held on Thursday, April 2, at 4:15 p.m., Room 1025 Angell Hall [or students in the College of Litera- ture, Science, and the Arts and others interested in future work in Engi- neering. The meeting, one of the vo- cational series designed to give in- formation concerning the nature of and preparation for the various pro- lessions, will be addressed by Dean 11. C. Sadler of the College of Engi- neering. The next professional talk, to be given by Prof. E. V. Moore, will be on Tuesday, April 7. Freshi en In the College of Litera- ture, Science, and the Arts who have not received their five-weeks pro- gress reports may obtain them in Room 102, Mason Hall, from 8 to 12 and 1:30 to 4:30 according to the following schedule: Surnames beginning Monday, April 6. Surnames beginning Tuesday, April 7. Surnames beginning Wednesday, April 8. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the Waiversity. Copy received at the office of the Assistant to the President unt 3:30; 11:00 a.m. on Saturday. A through G, H through 0, P through Z, r, EVENING RADIO PROGRAMS 'I Speech Of Senator Abel Chermont In The Permanent Sessio n Of The Brazilian Senate EDITOR'S NOTE: The following excerpts from the speech of Abel Chermont, Senator from the State of Para, are from the "News You Don't Get" bulle- tins of the Natloanal Committee for the Defense of Political Prisoners, of New York. They were trans- lated from the March 4, 1936 edition of the newspaper The Impartial" published in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The entire edition of the newspaper was confiscated by the police when it was discovered that Sr. Cher- mont's speech had been printed. Sr. Abel Chermont: Senor President: For 100 days the Brazilian people have suffered the ef- fects of the State of Siege which will go down in history as a deplorable action by those responsible fort the horrors now being committed. Never have the people been so deliberately misled. Never have so many crimes and so much violence been committed in the shadow of the suspension of con- stitutional guarantees. These are days of absolute insecurity! A simple telephone denunciation, and the unhappy victim, even without questioning, must expiate a crime he did not commit. The faintest suspicion is enough for a citizen to be pitilessly beaten to force him to confess "secrets" which the police attribute to his knowledge. Your Excellency knows, as every Senator knows, that the person of the prisoner is inviolate, even in wars, To torture a helpless prisoner is illegal, criminal, an inhumanity committed only by people who have a deformed morality. However, to the shame of our country, Your Excellency, the police have savagely beaten a great number of people who have fallen into their hands, persons accused of political crimes. And the barbarity used does not end with tor- tures and beatings. The preventive repression of the police exceeds this. Captain Jose de Medeiros, after being arrested by the police, was found dead in the Vista Chineza (a section in the heart of Rio de Janeiro -- Trans.). His hands and feet were broken and crushed. Twenty-three wounds from bullets of different calibers were found in his body. He lay in the same place where, some of Parana, Octavio da Salveira, sent the following telegram to the President of the Republic: (Ge- tulio Vargas - Trans.): "Senor President of the Republic: As a federal deputy and one of the first who took up arms in 1930 with Captain Joao Alberto for the establish- ment of a Free Brazil, I wish to inform you that the Brazilian citizens, Adalberto Fernandes and Clovis Araujo Liba, arrested more than 30 days ago as extremists, are being barbarously tortured, the latter so severely that he has been placed in a hospital. I have reliable information about these two, and also about the soldier, Abesguardo Mar- tins, who was beaten to death by the Special Police. I bring these facts to your knowledge feeling sure that you do not support these deeds and will not permit such crimes to occur under your government and with your knowledge, and I feel sure that you will act in time so that the above-mentioned prisoners will not be found dead tomorrow in the Vista Chineza, as happened with Captain Augusto Madeiros, whose unpunished murder demands jus- tice. Signed: Octavio da Salveira, Rio De Janerio, Feb. 11, 1935." It is precisely to expunge these crimes and to prevent their continuation that I am using this tribune in the name of my moral and political responsibility, and as a member of a Government Institution to whom the Brazilian Constitution charges in Article 88 with the duty of "defending the Constitution." I am certain that the senate will not refuse my petition (for a Commission of Investigation - Trans.). The most interested in the clarification of these crimes of the authorities is the Govern- ment itself, which is responsible for them and against whom accusations are made. These accu- sations are not only found in the newspapers - in spite of the censorship - but they are now placed before the eyes of the President of the Re- public as in the telegram sent him by Deputy 6:00-WJR Musical Moments. WVWJ Ty Tyson. WXYZ Rhythm Tunes. CKLW Omar. 6:15--WJR News of Youth. WXYZ Contrasts in Music. WWJ Dinner Music. CKLW Joe Gentile. 6:30-WJR Duncan Moore. WWJ Bulletins. WXYZ Day in Review. CKLW Rhythm Rambings. 6:45-WJR Strange as it Seems. WWJ Musical Moments. WXYZ Lowell Thomas. CKLW Old Bill. 7:00-WJR Myrt and Marge. WWJ Amos and Andy. WXYZ Easy Aces. CKLW Shadows on the Clock. 7:15-V/JR Jimmie Allen. :WWJ Human Side of News. WXYZ Alice Sheldon. 7:30-WJR Kate Smith. WWJ Evening Melodies. WXYZ Musical Moments. CKLW Variety Revue. 7:15-WJR Boake Carter. WWJ Fireside Stories. WXYZ Red Horse Ranch. 8:00--VJR Airshow: Alexander Gray: Mark Warnow's Music. WZWJRudy Vallee's Music. WVXYZ Pittsburgh Symphony. CKLW Gabriel Heatter. 8:15-CKLV Ghack Hylton's Music. 8 :30-WJR Gertrude Neisen and Harry Richman. WXYZ Merry-Go-Round. CKLW/ Little Symphony. 8:45-WJR Musical Program. 9:00-WJR walter O'Keefe: Glen Gray's Music. WWJZCaptain Henry's Showboat. WXYZ Death Valley Days. CKLW On Review. 9:15--CKLW Melody Treasure Hunt. 9:30-WJR Ed Wynn-Gulliver the Traveler. WXYZ Mellow Music. CKLW Pop Concert. 9 :45--WXYZ Lowry Clark's Music. 10:00--WJR Horace Heidt's Brigad iers. WWJ Bing Crosby: Jimmy Dorsey's Music. WXYZ Jubilee Singers. CKLW Recital Hall. 10:30--WJR March of Time. WXYZ Lowry Clark. CKLW Jack Hylton's Music. 10:45-WJR Dance Tunes. WXYZ Larry Funk's Music. 11:00-WJR Bulletins. WWJ Russ Lyon's Music. WXYZ Baker Twins. CKLW Freddy Martin's Music. 11:15-WJR Songs You Remember. CKLW Kay Kyser's Music. WXYZ Russ Morgan's Music. 11:30-VWWJ George Kavanagh's Music. WXYZ Meredith Wilson's Music. CKLW Ted Weems' Music. 11:45- WJR "Solay" violinist. 12 p.m.--WJR Barney Rapp's Music. WWJ Dance Music. WXYZ Paul Pendarvis' Music. CKLW Orville Knapp's Music. 12:30-WXYZ Ed Fitzpatrick's Music. V/JR Ozzie Nelson's Music. CKLW Will Osborne's Music. 1:00--CKLW DeMarco's Music. MORGAN, FORD ON WPA Mid-Semester Reports, School of Music: Cards for mid-semester re- ports are now in the mail. Reports should be mailed to Director Moore, School of Music, before spring vaca- tion. Fraternity financial reports as of March 31, 1936, will be due in the Office of the Dean of Students not later than Wednesday, April 22. J. A. Bursley, Dean. The University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Information has received announcement of United States Civil Service Examination for Assistant Director (Historic sites and buildings), National Park Service, Department of the Interior, salary $5,600. For further information concern- ing this examination call at 201 Ma- son Hall, office hours, 9:00 to 12:00 and 2:00 to 4:00. The Last Millionaire: This clever French comedy has complete English sub-titles. The box office for this show will be open from 1:00-6:00 on Thursday, 10:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m. on Friday and from 10:00 a.m.-10:30 p.m. on Saturday. Call 6300 for reservations. Academic Notices Schedule of Preliminary Examina- tions for the Ph.D. in English for Spring, 1935-36. April 25, American Literature. May 2, Nineteenth Century. May 9, Eighteenth Century May 16, Renaissance. May 23, Criticism. May 30, Mediaeval. ,June 6, Linguistics. Students who intend to take these examinations should register in the English Office. 3221 Angell Hall, be- fore April 6, 1936. Physical Education, Women Stu- dents: Tests in individual sports will be given at the following times out- side of class hours. Badminton, Monday, April 6, 4:15 to 6:00 p.m.; Tuesday, April 7, 4:15 to 6:00 p.m., Barbour Gymnasium. Swimming, Tuesday, April 7, 8:30 to 9:30 p.m.; Thursday, April 9, 8:30 to 9:30 p.m., Union Pool. Lectures University Lecture: Prof. Rudolf Carnap, of Prague, will lecture . (in English) on "Philosophy and Logical Analysis," Thursday, April 2, at 4:15 p.m. in the Natural Science Audi- torium. The public is cordially in- vited. urday. Dr. Wyer will give illustrat- ed lectures on the Presidents of the American Library Association as a basis for reviewing' the history of librarianship in the United States in the last sixty years. Chemistry Lecture: Dr. G. Egloff, of the Universal Oil Products Co., will lecture on "Modern Gasolines and Lubricants" on Tuesday, April 7, 4:15 p.m., Room 165, Chemistry Bldg. The lecture, which is under the auspices of the American Chemi- cal Society, is open to the public. Events Of Today Zoology Seminar: Mr. Gerald Cooper will speak on "Contributions to the life histories and ecological relationships of several important forage fishes of North America, with a brief outline of the forage fish problem," and Mr. George Wallace on "Bicknell's thrush, its taxonomy, distribution, and life history," 7:30 p.m., Room 216, N.S. Acolytes meet at 7:30 p.m., 202 South Wing. Prof. Rudolph Carnap, of Prague, will lecture on "The Unity of Science." The meeting is open to the public. Aeronautical Engineers: A meeting of the student branch of the Insti- tute of the Aeronautical Sciences will be held at 7:30 p.m. in Room 1042, East Engineering Building. This meeting will be devoted to a discus- sion of recent advances in the use of split flaps, Fowler flaps, slots, lateral control devices, etc. Undergraduates, as well as graduate engineers, are urged to attend this seminar and contribute to the discussion. I.Ae.S. Meeting: There will be a meeting of the Institute of Aero- nautical Sciences in Room 1042 of the East Engineering Bldg., 7:30 p.m., Open forum discusion on wind tun- nel work and high lift appliances, conducted by Professor Tompson. All Aero engineers are invited to par- ticipate. Phi Beta Kappa: The annual meet- ing forethe election of officers and new members and the transaction of routine business of the Chapter will be held at 4:15 p.m., Room 2203 An- gell Hall. All members are urged to be present. Phi Tau Alpha societas honorifica Latina Graecaque ante diem quartum Nonas Apriles (April 2) hora usitata in Hospitium Muierum Michiganen- sium coveniet. Disputatio de auctori- bus litterarum humaniorum scripta- rum per instaurationem magnam erit. Omnes Adeste! Advanced fencers: It is urgent that everyone be present in class at 3:15 p.m. in the Corrective Room of Bar- bour Gym. This is the last practice before the final combats to be held next week. Come anytime between 3:15 and 5:15. Hillel Foundation: Dr. Raphael Isaacs will speak on "Jewish Laws and Customs" at the Hillel Founda- tion at 8 p.m. All are welcome. Student Senate: A meeting will be held at 7:45 p.m. at the Union to which all students are invited. The speakers are to be Professor Hobbs, Professor Remer, Professor Dawson and Mr. Jaffee, a student. The question for the evening is "What Proposals Should the Student Sup- port to Keep the United States Out of War?" An open forum will follow the brief presentation of the various proposals. All interested are invited to attend. Harris Hall: Today from 12 to 1 o'clock the Student Starvation Lun- cheon will be served in Harris Hall. The proceeds will go for the Rector's Discretionary Fund for students. All students and their friends are cor- dially invited. Coming Evonts Transportation Club will visit the Ford plant Friday, April 3. Will leave the East Engineering Building at 1:20. If going, please leave your name at the Transportation Library. Graduate Outing Club will have a Horseshoe Pitching contest and games at the Island Saturday, April 4. All interested will meet at Lane Hall at 3:00 p.m. Following the con- test, supper is to be served for 25 cents. All Graduate students are cordially invited to attend. Fourth Dance Recital: Friday eve- ning at 8:30 p.m. the fourth in a series of annual dance recitals will be presented by Play Production and the Department of Physical Educa- tion assisted by the University Sym- phony Orchestra. Tickets are 50 and 35c and may be reserved by phoning the box office of the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, 6300.